I dreamed I drove on a Florida road, still and straight and
empty. On either side were groves of orange trees, so that as I turned to look
at them from time to time, line after line of trees stretched back endlessly
from the road. Their boughs were heavy with round yellow fruit. This was
harvest time. My wonder grew as the miles slipped by. How could the harvest be
gathered?
Suddenly I realized that for all the hours I had driven (and this was how I knew I must be dreaming) I had seen no other person. The groves were empty of people. No other car had passed me. No houses were to be seen beside the highway. I was alone in a forest of orange trees.
But, at last, I saw some orange pickers. Far from the
highway, almost on the horizon, lost in the vast wilderness of unpicked fruit,
I could discern a tiny group of them working steadily. And many miles later I
saw another group. I could not be sure, but I suspected that the earth beneath
me was shaking with silent laughter at the hopelessness of their task. Yet the
pickers went on picking.
The sun had long passed its zenith and the shadows were
lengthening when, without any warning, I turned a corner of the road to see a
notice "Leaving NEGLECTED COUNTY - Entering HOME COUNTY." The
contrast was so startling that I scarcely had time to take in the notice. I had
to slow down for all at once the traffic was heavy. People by the thousands
swarmed the road and crowded the sidewalks.
"Is it a holiday?" I asked a well-dressed woman
with whom I fell in step.
She looked a little startled for a moment, and then her face
relaxed with a smile of gracious condescension.
"You're a stranger, aren't you?" she said before I
could reply, "This is Orange Day." She must have seen a puzzled look
on my face, for she went on, "It is so good to turn aside from one's
labours and pick oranges one day of the week."
"But don't you pick oranges every day?" I asked
her. "One may pick oranges at any time," she said, "We should
always be ready to pick oranges, but Orange Day is the day that we devote
especially to orange picking."
I left her and made my way further into the trees. Most of
the people were carrying a book. Bound beautifully in leather, and edged and
lettered in gold, I was able to discern on the edge of one of them the words:
The Orange Picker's Manual.
By and by I noticed around one of the orange trees, seats
had been arranged, rising upward in tiers from the ground. The seats were
almost full-but as I approached the group, a smiling well-dressed gentleman
shook my hand and conducted me to a seat.
There, around the foot of the orange tree, I could see a
number of people. One of them was addressing all the people on the seats and
just as I got to my seat, everyone rose to his feet and began to sing. The man
next to me shared with me his songbook. It was called: Songs of the Orange
Groves. They sang for some time and the song leader waved his arms with a
strange and frenzied abandon, exhorting the people in the intervals between the
songs to sing more loudly. I grew steadily more puzzled.
"When do we start to pick oranges?" I asked the
man who had loaned me his book. "It's not long now," he told me.
"We like to get everyone warmed up first. Besides, we want to make the
oranges feel at home." I thought he was joking; but his face was serious.
"But we don't pick oranges," the man explained.
"We haven't been called. That's the Orange Picker's job. We're here to
support him. Besides we haven't been to college. You need to know how an orange
thinks before you can pick it successfully; orange psychology, you know. Most
of these folk here," he went on, pointing to the congregation, "have
never been to Manual School."
"Manual School," I whispered. "What's
that?"
"It's where they go to study the The Orange Picker's
Manual," my informant went on. "It's very hard to understand. You
need years of study before it makes sense."
"I see, I murmured. I had no idea that picking oranges
was so difficult."
The large man at the front was still making his speech. His
face was red and he appeared to be indignant about something. So far as I could
see there was rivalry with some of the other "orange-picking" groups.
But a moment later a glow came on his face,
"But we are not forsaken," he said. "We have
much to be thankful for. Last week we saw THREE ORANGES BROUGHT INTO OUR
BASKETS, and we are now completely debt free from the money we owed on the new
cushion covers that grace the seats you now sit on."
"Isn't it wonderful?" the man next to me murmured.
I made no reply. I felt that something must be profoundly wrong somewhere. All
this seemed to be a very roundabout way of picking oranges.
"What in the world do you think we're doing?" he
hissed. "What do you suppose this tremendous effort has been made for?
There's more orange-picking talent in this group than in the rest of Home
County. Thousands of dollars have been spent on the tree you're looking
at."
I apologized quickly. "I wasn't being critical," I
said. "And I'm sure the large man must be a very good orange picker - but
surely the rest of us could try. After all, there are so many oranges that need
picking. We've all got a pair of hands and we could read the Manual."
"When you've been in the business as long as I have,
you'll realize that it's not as simple as that," he replied. "There
isn't time, for one thing. We have our work to do, our families to care for,
and our homes to look after. We . . ."
But I wasn't listening. Light was beginning to break on me.
Whatever these people were, they were not orange pickers. Orange picking was
just a form of entertainment for their weekends.
I tried one or two more of the groups around the trees. Not
all of them had such high academic standards for orange pickers. Some held
classes on orange picking. I tried to tell them of the trees I had seen in
Neglected County but they seemed to have little interest.
"We haven't picked the oranges here yet," was
their usual reply.
The sun was almost setting in my dream and, growing tired of
the noise and activity all around me, I got in the car and began to drive back
again along the road I had come. Soon all around me again were the vast and
empty orange groves.
But there were changes. Something had happened in my
absence. Everywhere the ground was littered with fallen fruit. And as I watched
it seemed that before my eyes the trees began to rain oranges. Many of them lay
rotting on the ground.
I felt there was something so strange about it all, and my
bewilderment grew as I thought of all the people in Home County.
Then, booming through the trees there came a voice which said,
"The harvest truly is plenteous but the labourers are few; Pray ye
therefore the Lord of the harvest", that he will send forth labourers . .
."
And I awakened - for it was only a dream!
No comments:
Post a Comment